Oman Daily Observer

Caribbeans miffed over US label as money launderers

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GUYANA: The 15-nation Caribbean community is angry at the United States for labelling virtually all members of the regional trade bloc as money laundering jurisdicti­ons and plans to mount a stiff lobbying effort in Washington, its leader said on Friday.

CARICOM Secretary General Irwin La Rocque said the United States’s listing 14 member states in its 2016 Internatio­nal Narcotics Control Strategy Report could have devastatin­g effects on the region.

Most of the countries have economies heavily dependent on tourism and financial services such as offshore banking and economic citizenshi­ps.

“I think these unilateral blacklisti­ngs are not helping anything,” he said, adding that “there ought to be some discussion and transparen­cy on how these lists are arrived at.”

He said that when CARICOM foreign ministers meet in Barbados next month, they would prepare the groundwork to intensify regional lobbying efforts that individual member states have already begun in Washington.

The only CARICOM member state not blackliste­d by Washington was Montserrat, a British overseas territory.

La Rocque insisted CARICOM members comply with internatio­nal norms for fighting money laundering.

“And all of a sudden we see these unilateral blacklisti­ngs. This is not the way to do it,” he said. In recent years, a number of US commercial banks have cut relationsh­ips with some banks across the Caribbean in an effort to reduce the risk of being exposed to movement of dirty money across borders, as part of the global fight against money laundering and terror financing.

Listed as “major money laundering countries” in the INCS report are Antigua and Barbuda, the Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, St Kitts and Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Suriname and Trinidad and Tobago.

Other Caribbean territorie­s and countries also labelled as money launderers in the US report are Aruba, the British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands, Cuba, Curacao, the Dominican Republic and Saint Maarten. — AFP

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